W 6B WednesdayOctober15 2014 // The Statement Curtain call: Life after theatre school by Paige Pfleger The world of theatre is cutthroat. Being talented isn't always enough to land a role in the ipetitive world of profes- sional performance. Actors need to look, dress, act and be the part of the character they're pretending to be. A whole slew of factors can throw a wrench into the best laid plans, espe- cially when hundreds of people are competing for the same role. The same goes for making it into theatre school - especial- ly at the University. Competi- 4AiQ doesn't end once students are accepted. Throughout the course of their careers in the School of Music, Theatre & Dance, actors audition for hun- dreds of plays, musicals and movies. A lot of time, they don't get cast, but that rejection is all a part of a learning process. The culture of theatre school is a lot like the harsh realities that face actors and actresses after graduation. But does that mean that actors and actresses are ready to face professional challenges by the time 'r-Ouation rolls around? For actress Jacqueline Toboni, the answer was a resounding yes. It was Winter 2014 when Toboni hit her big break. She had been cast in the Screen Arts & Cultures 423 film, "Bad Girls," and Grimm Executive Producer Jim Kouf paid a visit to the class. He was impressed with some of the actresses in the film and had them do a practice audition for a role in the show, Trubel. Kouf was so taken with Tobo- ni that he cast her in the role. Tobani's training at SMTD gave her he skills to snag the acting opportunity, while still graduating on time in May 2014. Currently, she's filming in Portland. "Not every school would let me do that," Toboni said. "I think Michigan is really good at seeing the bigger picture. They're good at saying, 'Listen, we're teaching you all of this stuff, in order for you to get work.' And as an actor, that's really hard. So when that oppor- tunity presented itself they encouraged me to take advantage of that. I think that's something that is very special, and I don't know what I would have done if I didn't do that." '1 hat's one of the overwhelmingly posi- tive things about SMTD - through their coursework and academic opportunities, the school has been trying to teach their actors the skills for them to succeed, and if they find that success earlier than expected, students are allowed to chase after it. Music, Theatre & Dance alum CJ Eldred, a musical theatre major, had a similar expe- rience to Toboni. He was cast as the stand- by-for-lead in the first national tour of "Book of Mormon" the semester before he was sup- posed to graduate. "Michigan gave me all of the tools, and all of the opportunities to really start my career strong," Eldred said. But not everyone in the theatre and musi- cal theatre programs had the same experi- ences as Toboni and Eldred. Other than talent, Eldred admitted that something else comes into play as well - luck. "I was lucky compared to other people in my class that I had this fortunate opportu- nity that there was a show that suited me so well, and that I also had producers that were trusting that a kid who hadn't even gradu- ated college yet could jump in and play the role," he explained. "I definitely think that there's the same opportunities for people, and it's just as possible for anyone in my class to have had the same thing happen to them." Music Theatre & Dance senior Adam Quinn, specializing in directing within the theatre performance program, was given the opportunity to leave and assume a associate director role in a show during Winter 2014 at 5th Avenue Theatre in Seattle, and is cur- rently directing at Goodspeed Opera House in East Haddam, Conn., widely known as the home of the American musical. Even though SMTD let him leave to pur- sue these opportunities, Quinn didn't feel as if he was encouraged or appreciated for doing so. Instead he felt quite the opposite. "I found that many times, I am looked at negatively by some people in the depart- ment," he said. "Not only faculty, but also students, and the way they think it's sup- posed to be run versus what is going to give me the best education possible." Quinn said he is often times disappointed in that way that faculty members at SMTD respond to non-SMTD theatre produc- tions, like the musical group MUSKET, or independent Basement Arts that often offer opportunities to students in and outside of SMTD. "The faculty sometimes looks down on things like MUSKET and Basement Arts, and I think that's really negative," he explained. "It's allowing students to become better. No, they're not being directed by fac- ulty but sometimes, students can really learn from other students." Despite the pushback that he received when trying to take time off, Quinn admits that he really couldn't have gotten the same quality of education at any other school. For that reason, he says the University's pro- gram is really unmatched. "I would not be where I am today," Quinn said, "and as prepared as I am today to go into the professional world, than if I didn't go to school at Michigan and learn from these fac- ulty members and take these courses and be given these opportunities," he said. Music Theatre & Dance senior Teagan Rose, specializing in acting within the the- atre performance program, knew Michi- gan's acting program was the place for her from the moment she visited campus. "Michigan was actually the very last place that I auditioned for, and the last place I vis- ited, and it was the only place when I came here, as cliche as it sounds, I had the moment - the 'this is my school' moment, the feel- ing in my gut that this is the place that I'm supposed to be," she said. "It was the faculty, and the auditions and the campus." Part of what intrigued Rose the most about SMTD was the com- petitive nature and the con- stant challenges that the actors face. Difficult shows, classes, auditions and roles keep the students constant- ly on their toes, and, as a result, constantly improving and striving to be better. "I never want to settle on what I have, I always strive to be better because I know I always can be better. So I find being in a department where everybody is so tal- ented, and it is very com- petitive and the caliber is so high, it's actually even more encouraging because it just makes sure that everybody is on their A-game." Rose is looking forward to a semester full of shows, including playing the lead role in the play "Fuenteove- juna," which centers on themes of female empowerment. Life after graduation is still up in the air, but she hopes to move to California to start her career act- ing for film or stage. Even though Music Theatre & Dance alum Al Fallick made it into the school of musical theater, which is the most competi- tive program at SMTD, he isn't doing musi- cal theatre in his post-grad life. Instead, he's moved to L.A. to pursue a career in comedy. "I feel like musical theatre and comedy are very closely tied," he said. "Some of the same things that help you succeed in musi- cal theatre and some of the same things that help you succeed in comedy: high emotions, big characters, you know?" Because there isn't really a graduate school for comedians, Fallick is taking class- es at The Groundlings, an improv and sketch comedy school that has cranked out comedi- ans like Kristen Wiig and Melissa McCarthy. While he's taking classes, he is supporting himself through a job at Starbucks. "The big negative, I think, is getting seen for job interviews that don't have to do with the industry, when my resume says I am a musical theatre major." Unlike Fallick, many of the musical the- atre majors end up in New York City, audi- tioning for Broadway productions. Acting majors are more divided, with some pur- suing stage plays in New York and others trying to land roles in TV or movies, like Toboni. The upcoming class of graduates will wind up spread across the country, or even the nation, trying to use their Michigan edu- cation to their advantage while auditioning for shows. Maybe they'll hit it big. Not all of them do, but it's like they say - that's show biz, kid. THE THOUGHT BUBBLE famous by association: allow me to introduce myself BY MARIAM SHEIKH A h, fall. Countless autumn- da Bynes over the case studies of colored leaves, college Freud (Team Mandy 'til the end). iris in boots toting PSLs For those obsessed with the enig- and a shitload of classes that you ma that is Kimye (hate allyou want will no doubt but if you're sleep your on the cover way through. of Vogue, you While we must be doing are all busy -- something studying (dar- I I I ISF R right). For the tying?) away few who can on our own ALL THE name all of private island Angelina and that is Ann H 0 L LY W O0 D _ Brad's kids. Arbor, it's This is for the easy to bypass Hollywood- what's going obsessed on around junkies who us. For those JUNKIES W HO care about: of you who George Cloo- have been too CA R E A BOUT ney getting preoccupied married, Bill in the UGLi G EO RG E Murray being (Basement weird, Mindy of some frat? KNaling, James In bed with C LOO N E Y Franco shav- Netflix?) and ing his head, missed out G ETT I NG Ryan Gos- on the crucial ling naming happenings in M AR RI ED his kid after the most elite a third-tier club there is, Disney char- La La Land acter and Ben "The movie that I saw that made me want to be a film maker is called 'Boogie Nights.' It is about the porn industry in the late '70s, early '80s ... I really love it, it's almost like a hallucinatory coming-of-age film because he's porn star, which is kind of weird. It was the first movie that I felt spoke to me and it made me think that I could achieve that sort of emotional intimacy and sincerity in a film and also have lots of fun stuff." -KYLE WEBER, LSA JUNIOR has been car- rying on. And it never disap- points. This column will be an outlet for those of you who would rather debate the mental state of Aman- - Affleck prov- ing to millions of movie- goers that he's still got it, and then some. This should be fun. This will be entertaining. Next up, I'll be writing about man buns. RPRINTS: WHAT ARE YOU READING? "AT Aa IAr OgrVAJE 1 01 A 6KcW. . Rm V TbV R nV BYl~u.y tykv4. A NR UE BY ANDREW FULLER